Before last season's BCS title game between Alabama and LSU in New Orleans, no one would have blamed you.

Stamp was an 18-year-old LSU student who volunteered his time for good causes and had just been re-united with his biological mother.

Downing, an Alabama fan, was a 32-year-old husband and father of a 4-month-old child with a promising career.

Heavy drinking by both on college football's biggest night changed all of that.

Now Stamp has left the school he loves, and Downing is preparing for a jail sentence.

Downing was the "teabagger," the man caught on video in a Krystal on Bourbon Street - after Alabama's win over LSU - placing his genitals on an unconscious LSU fan. That man was Stamp.

ESPN The Magazine has done an in-depth piece, entitled "Last Time They Met," with both men who will be forever linked with that infamous night in New Orleans. A night they won't soon forget, but a night that both say they don't remember either - at least fully.

The piece chronicles the days after the incident as information - and the video - leaked out of New Orleans, how they were identified, how they told loved ones and how it turned their worlds upside down.

The teabagging story caught the nation's attention. It was a hot topic on Internet chat rooms, social media, radio shows and more as it was dissected and debated. Was it just a college prank? Or was it a sex crime? Polls were taken.

Now, the two central figures in the case speak about what they remember - and don't remember - in the time leading up to the night and the firestorm after it.

As ESPN writes:

"Internet infamy can be both forever and mercifully fleeting. With any luck, in a year or so every nonvirtual part of this strange story will be over. Brian Downing will be out of jail and Garrison Stamp will have earned enough credits to transfer back to LSU. He still loves the Tigers."